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The ability to identify an individual’s race or ethnicity on the basis of
voice alone is a phenomenon that has been referred to as linguistic
profiling, a topic that will be taken up in more detail in the discussion of
discrimination in the housing market.
Baugh’s work on linguistic profiling and the role of vowel shapes,
intonation, timing and voice quality in social and racial identification
becomes potentially relevant in this context (Thomas and Reaser 2004).
Unfortunately, no studies have been done, to date, of the way linguistic
profiling might work in an entertainment setting such as animated films.
It needs to be stated quite clearly that this discussion does not include
the sum total of all African American actors who have ever had speaking
roles in Disney animated film. For example, a thorough examination
would require close study of The Song of the South, which Disney has yet
to release on VHS tape or DVD for reasons that may or may not have to do
with concerns about image and racism.
The most ideology-laden of the films examined here is probably the
Lion King, which fulfills all four of criteria listed above. The Lion King is
set in Africa, which may be the reason why many of the voice actors were
African American. Of the three major roles, two of the voice actors are
Anglo (Simba and Scar, his uncle), and one is African American (Mufasa).
Mufasa is voiced by the immediately recognizable James Earl Jones;
Mufasa’s evil brother Scar is voiced in an exaggerated and distinctly
effeminate British English (Jeremy Irons). This falls into a well-
established practice of rendering evil geniuses as Brits (see, for example,
Aladdin and Bolt), but it also portrays homosexuality as evil, untrust-
worthy, and inauthentic. Scar is also the only lion with a black mane.
But it is the casting of the primary character – Simba – which stands
out. As cub and as an adult lion, Simba is voiced by Anglos. That is, the

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